How Life in Our Cities Will Look After the Coronavirus Pandemic
Cities will remain critical to human society, but they need to change. The coronavirus and high-density living have gone together from the start.
This author has not written his bio yet.
But we are proud to say that video contributed 137 entries already.
Cities will remain critical to human society, but they need to change. The coronavirus and high-density living have gone together from the start.
Joel Kotkin (Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University, Executive Director of the Urban Reform Institute, Author of, “The Human City: Urbanism For The Rest Of Us”) joins the show to discuss his article at Fortune titled, “After Coronavirus, We Need To Rethink Densely Populated Cities”.
This could be a real turning point [for New York] and could accelerate what has already been happening,” said Joel Kotkin, the Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University in California.
Joel Kotkin joins Ben Domenech on The Federalist Radio Hour to discuss how cities will be transformed after the coronavirus pandemic ends.
Joel Kotkin talks with Dan Proft about how the two middle classes are — or are not — being addressed by our political leaders.
Democrats have their own autocrat; Bloomberg perfectly fits into Frum’s definition of authoritarianism, built on “rule-twisting, the manipulation of information, and the co-optation of elites.”
We’ve regarded the nuclear family arrangement as a deeply entrenched status quo yet it was an outlier until the 1950s, notes Joel Kotkin.
by C. Gopinath — After being ignored for many decades as a lost continent, perhaps what woke up Africa is digital connectivity with the rest of the world.
People are leaving the state of California in droves and it could leave a lasting mark on the world’s 5th largest economy. Joel Kotkin addresses this topic on CNBC’s Nightly Business Report.
Charles Schwab is moving its headquarters from California to Texas. Joel Kotkin, Chapman University, joins ‘The Exchange’ to discuss why more and more companies are leaving California for other states.